Thinking Skills: Critical Thinking and Problem Solving

(singke) #1

46 Unit 2 Critical thinking: the basics


look for the direct reasons that support it. Then
look for reasons (if any) that support the direct
reasons. In other words, work backwards from
what you think is the main conclusion. Find:

(first) conclusion ← (then) direct reasons ←
(then) reasons for the reasons.

Put them together to see if they make sense as
an argument. If not, try again.

Reported or ‘embedded’ arguments
Very often, in the media, or in magazines and
journals, arguments are reported, rather than
being expressed directly. Another way of
saying this is that an argument may be
embedded in a report or article or piece of
research, and so on. Argument [2] is a direct
argument. But originally it appeared in the
following way:

[2a] An environmental consortium has
advised against rushing headlong into
large-scale recycling projects without
carefully weighing the gains and the
losses, pointing out that recycling used
materials may in the long run prove
uneconomical. ‘The cost of collecting
up and sorting rubbish,’ said their
representative, ‘plus the cost of the
recycling process itself, often makes
the end product more expensive than
manufacturing the same product from
raw materials.’ This extra cost, she
went on, has to be paid by someone: 

... [etc.]


Strictly speaking this is not an argument: it is a
report of an argument, made by someone
other than the author of the report. The
author of the report is not arguing for or
against large-scale recycling projects; and we
have no idea from the report alone whether he
or she agreed or disagreed with its premises or
conclusion, at the time of writing.
Nonetheless, there is an argument
embedded in [2a], and it can be analysed and

it is the taxpayer in the form of
subsidies.

IC1 (from R1 & R2)
Recycling used materials may in the long
run prove uneconomical.
R3 The high levels of energy required for
processing waste can cause pollution.
R4 This can also add to global warming.

IC2 (from R3 & R4)
Recycling is not always the best solution
environmentally.

C (from IC1 & IC2)
We should not rush headlong into
large-scale recycling projects.

IC1 IC2

C

R1 & R2 R3 & R4

In this example the diagram really helps to
show the complex argument structure. There
are two separate lines of reasoning and
therefore two arrows leading to the conclusion.
If you took away one of the lines, say R3 & R4 →
IC2, you would still have an argument for C. It
would not be as strong, because it would
present only the economic reasons for not
rushing into recycling, not the economic and
environmental reasons. Similarly, if you took
away or refuted the sub-argument leading to
IC1, you would still have an environmental
argument to fall back on.

A useful strategy
You saw in both [1] and [2] that there were
direct and indirect reasons. A good strategy for
analysing difficult arguments is this: first select
what you think is the main conclusion, then
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